Craftsman bungalow home styles developed from the British Arts & Crafts movement, feature double-hung or casement window, exterior trim that contrasts with the window frame color, and grille patterns that create vertical proportions.

The french eclectic home style features a combination of French architectural styles, was popularized by soldiers returning from WWI, tall, steeply pitched, hipped or gabled roofs, and vertically oriented windows with grilles.

The prairie home style is the first architecture of American origin, features casement windows that combine in horizontal shapes, brown, red and rust window trim colors, and art glass or Prairie grilles.

The Shingle home style is distinctly American and traces its beginnings to the late 19th Century, with interiors borrowed heavily from the Arts & Crafts style, features window height-to-width proportion of 2-to-1, a wide variety of accent windows, and 6" x 6" square grille patterns.